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ON SOME DINOSAUE KEMAINS FEOM BUSHMANLAND. 
By S. H. Haughton, B.A., F.G.S. 
(Bead May 19, 1915.) 
According to the nature of their fossiUzation the fossils collected by 
Dr. Eogers on the farm Kangnas, Bushmanland, Cape Province, can 
be divided into three groups. The first group comprises a single tooth 
lacking the end of the root, and an almost complete femur. These are 
highly calcified, but are weathered clean out of the original matrix, and 
have highly polished brown external surfaces. The femur has suffered a 
certain amount of superficial crushing. The second group comprises 
portions of other femora and of other bones of the hind leg, together with 
two vertebrae. These bones are highly calcified and compact, and were 
for the most part enclosed in a variable calcareous conglomerate which, in 
its harder parts, came away with difficulty from the bone surface. The- 
third group consists of a number of fragments of vertebrae and bones of 
the foot, which are highly porous and cancellous in structure, and super- 
ficially appear to be from a different deposit from the bones of the other 
groups. All the remains, however, are Dinosaurian in character. Judging 
from their relative sizes, the bones of the first two groups belong to a. 
single species of the Ornithopoda, which I propose to name Kangnasauru& 
coeizeei, n.g. et sp., after Mr. Coetzee, the owner of the farm Kangnas, by 
whom the remains were first brought to Dr. Eogers. 
To avoid confusion the tooth to be described is taken as the type 
of this new form. 
Kangnasaueus coetzeei, n.g. et sp. 
The only tooth obtained is a maxillary tooth of the right side (S.A.M. 
Cat., No. 2732). It has the crown partially worn down in an oblique 
manner so that the outer border of the worn surface forms a sharp 
crenulated cutting edge, and it lacks the extremity of the root. The root 
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